With of the threat of a lockout casting a Jay Feaster-sized shadow over the start of the NHL season, finding some silver linings during these August days has been trying.

Fortunately with Hockey Prospectus’ Corey Pronman revealing his list of the Ottawa Senators’ top 10 prospects today, prospect porn indulging Sens fans have some beacon of light to divert their attention.

Here is his summation of the system that he ranks as being the fifth best in the NHL:

This is a ridiculously deep system. Players like Jarrod Maidens, Ben Blood, and Fredrik Claesson, who would all be in just about any team’s top 15 prospects, end up off Ottawa’s top 15. They lack the multiple star prospects outside of Mika Zibanejad, but there are still so many quality youngsters in this organization.

In the past, he has alluded to the position’s volatility and the high attrition rate for goalies, so it’s not particularly surprising to see Lehner slip in his rankings. Keep in mind, this isn’t some condemnation of Lehner’s ability or indicative of his future, but in a tweet to one Sens fan who questioned his omission, Pronman preferred to credit the strength of Ottawa’s system and the positional prospects that ranked ahead of the Swedish goaltender as the basis for his decision.

From a personal standpoint, I found a few things to be particularly surprising:

Cody Ceci being second on the list – Considering how close a few of Ottawa’s other highly regarded prospects like Silfverberg and Stone are to being NHL-ready (if they’re not already), his place seems high. But it is certainly reassuring to see a defensive propect that high on the list as the organizations depth at that position needs work.

Shane Prince being placed fifth ahead of his fellow 2011 draft class members Stefan Noesen and Matt Puempel was also noteworthy.

Despite his inconsistencies at the professional level and the throat injury that he suffered this past season, I fully expected to see Patrick Wiercioch slide out of the team’s top ten rankings.

Finally, I was surprised to see Pronman list Zibanejad as a center. Even in his individual write up for Mika, Corey acknowledges that he probably profiles more as a winger at the NHL-level:

Zibanejad is a prototypical do-everything forward with above-average or better tools across the board, and he is one of the more complete prospects in hockey. He’s an above-average skater who has shown some improvement in that area and generates good power from his stride. Zibanejad is a high-end puck-handler who can dazzle with his hands. He also is a good passer who will flash plus ability in that area. He has a bullet shot and can score from mid-distance. Zibanejad is a tremendous on-ice worker who barrels through each check and gives it his all every shift. He’s also a pretty effective defensive player who can play center or wing, although I see him as the latter down the line. He’s NHL-ready.

Although this third party ballyhooing of Ottawa’s system is a nice feather in the cap for the management team and the scouting staff, it’s not raining gum drops and the Rideau Canal isn’t made of chocolate. In the greater scheme of things, the rankings while nice, mean nothing until these prospects actually pan out – they’re still just prospects.

Keeping that in mind, many will not fulfill the lofty expectations that so frequently come with the territory, however, the fact that Ottawa has seemingly accumulated so many since the John Muckler era ended hopefully means that the odds are stacked in Ottawa’s favor that at least a few will pan. At the very least, with prospects and draft picks being the currency of the NHL, this stockpiling of young prospects provides the organization the flexibility to flip this quantity for better quality.